Recent Software

For those interested my recent (march 2001) software whereabouts,
I'll put some stuff up download on this page, the executables
(.exe) are compiled for 486, with dmpi (donno the version)
present, and the graphics programs may ask for 640x480x8bit,
and may not run under anything else but plain dos, that
is not started up as windows subwindow, because I have an
old version of gnu.

March 7, 2000

col.c Source of
a 3d graphics tryout program, press a button several times to
get more (rotated) 3d views. Completely exprimental, to find
out various machine boundaries and use my quite basic graphics
routines, not yet the more advanced ones. rot.c rotation functions, needed in above the program Note it may not run
at all when not in complete dos mode (due to my grx+gnu compiler version)

mat.c matrix test program sourcemat.exe run this program in
a dos window with one argument, the number of dimensions, for instance
3, see what matrix it randomly makes, how it is inverted, and
wether the resulting vector indeed is a good solution. The parameter
may be up to 100 or 200 or so, but beware that that will print a lot
of data (100x100=?), maybe use mat 32 > matout.txt or so to
redirect output to a file, which can than be read into a
wordprocessor.

dx sound names list per bankdx sound names sorted list both
these files contain about 10,000 DX7 sound names, and the name of the sound bank
they are from, and the DX7 algorithm parameter, the first is in order of the
banks, the second is sorted to alphabetical ordering, both are big, a few hundred
kilobytes (half a minute on isdn), the sorted misses some sounds, about 2/3
seem present, and they give an idea of what a database of dx7 sounds could
contain, and why it may be handy to have more distinction possibilities
than merely the names.

I don't know how 'legal' the library is, I just used the sound presented
in the dx72csnd package. I don't know url's by heart, if you're interested,
mail me, these are valid sounds for the latest phrase synthesizer module from
Yamaha, too.

I'll see if I can put up some converted images of with fancy enough
graphics, they start to look ok enough to be looked at as examples,
maybe I can find some small enough converter program (gnu
ate up most my harddisc space, and csound doesn't make it empty
either...)